• About Us
    • Àtẹ́lẹwọ́ Podcast
  • Contact
  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
Freelanews
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
    • Crime
  • Business
  • Brands
  • Banking
  • Opinion
  • Interview
  • Entertainment
  • Podcast
    • Àtẹ́lẹwọ́
  • Sports
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Crime
  • Business
  • Brands
  • Banking
  • Opinion
  • Interview
  • Entertainment
  • Podcast
    • Àtẹ́lẹwọ́
  • Sports
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
Freelanews
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion

The insecurity triad: money, land and mind — The Capstone

Rising kidnapping, banditry and terrorism deepen national instability

David Okere by David Okere
April 13, 2026
in Opinion
0 0
0
The insecurity triad

The insecurity triad: money, land and mind — The Capstone

Nigeria Insecurity Triad Crisis worsens as kidnapping, banditry and terrorism threaten national stability and sovereignty

By MAX AMUCHIE | THE SUNDAY STEW

A nation does not collapse all at once. It erodes—layer by layer, system by system—until what once appeared unshakable begins to give way under the weight of forces it can no longer contain.

Also read: Riverine communities get boost as Blue Lagos launches engagement drive

Over the past three weeks in THE SUNDAY STEW, we have stirred a bitter pot.

We have examined the liquidity of kidnapping, the territorial siege of banditry, and the ideological ghost of insurgency.

Together, they form The Insecurity Triad—a structural anomaly that has come to redefine the Nigerian experience.
This is not merely a collection of crimes.
It is a system.

perfect aesthetic dental clinic perfect aesthetic dental clinic perfect aesthetic dental clinic

The Commodification of Life
In Part I, as the series began on 22 March 2026, we confronted kidnapping—not as isolated criminality, but as an organised economic enterprise.

The ransom economy revealed a chilling truth: human beings have become assets in a marketplace of fear.

From highways to homes, from schoolchildren to clergy, the logic is brutally simple—abduct, negotiate, extract.
This is not random violence. It is structured liquidity.

Money flows from victims to networks. Networks expand. Operations scale. And with each successful transaction, the system is reinforced.

Kidnapping, in this sense, is the venture capital of insecurity—the financial engine that sustains the wider ecosystem of violence.

The Capture of Land
In Part II, where we discussed the rural siege, we moved from the highway to the farmland, from individual victims to entire communities. Banditry, we found out, is not merely about raids—it is about occupation.

Across vast stretches of rural Nigeria, the land itself has become contested terrain. Farmers are taxed. Villages are emptied. Harvests are controlled.

The transformation is as quiet as it is devastating: A nation that cannot freely cultivate its land cannot feed itself.
What emerges is a new and dangerous reality—a bandit tax embedded in the cost of survival.

From the farmer in Zamfara to the market trader in Abuja, the burden travels along a chain of coercion until it reaches the Nigerian household.
Banditry is the real estate strategy of insecurity—the physical occupation of the spaces that sustain life.

The Colonisation of the Mind
In Part III, we descended into the deepest layer of the crisis—terrorism, which I called the ideological ghost.

If kidnapping trades in bodies, and banditry controls land, terrorism seeks something far more enduring: belief.
Groups such as Boko Haram and ISWAP are not merely violent actors; they are ideological movements.

Their aim is not just to disrupt the state, but to replace it—to redefine authority, reshape identity, and impose a new order.
This is the colonisation of the mind. And it is here that the crisis becomes existential.

From Heritage to Fracture
As I noted in previous editions of THE SUNDAY STEW, Ali Mazrui famously described Africa as a convergence of the Indigenous, the Islamic, and the Western—a Triple Heritage that, in its synthesis, held the promise of balance and coexistence.
What we are witnessing today, however, is not synthesis. It is fragmentation.
The forces within The Insecurity Triad do not merely exploit weakness—they deepen division, distort belief, fracture identity, and erode the fragile equilibrium that once held diverse traditions together.

Where heritage once offered cohesion, insecurity now manufactures contradiction.

From Structure to System
To understand the true danger of The Insecurity Triad, we must see it not as three separate threats, but as a single, interlocking system:
Kidnapping generates the money;
Banditry controls the land;
Terrorism shapes the mind;
Each pillar feeds and reinforces the others. This is not a coincidence. It is convergence.

A Nation in Transaction
The most chilling consequence of this system is that Nigeria is drifting from a productive economy into a transactional economy of fear:
When a parent pays a ransom to save a child, they are not simply buying back a child—they are paying a sovereignty tax to a criminal shadow-state.
When the breadbasket is taxed by bandits, we are not merely witnessing rising food prices—we are seeing the slow erosion of the agrarian promise.
The Insecurity Triad is not just a security failure—it is a devaluation of the Nigerian human being.

The Sovereignty Question Lingers
As noted in the 5 April edition, one question bears repeating:
Who governs Nigeria?:
Is it the state—with its constitution, institutions, and laws?
Or is it a network of non-state actors who control territory, extract resources, and shape belief through force?
A nation does not lose its sovereignty only when its borders are breached.
It loses it when its authority is contested from within.

A Reflection: Reclaiming the Sacred

If trust is sacred as we proclaim in Sundiata Post, then the path out of this crisis must begin with restoring that sanctity.
We cannot automate our way out of a crisis of character. Technology—drones, data, surveillance—can monitor the threat, but it is reflective leadership that will dismantle it.

We must re-occupy our ungoverned spaces—not only with force, but with schools, justice, opportunity, and a renewed social contract that treats every citizen’s safety as non-negotiable.

Conclusion: The Stew Still Simmers

The Insecurity Triad is a heavy meal to digest. But we ignore its ingredients at our own peril.

As we move forward in THE SUNDAY STEW, we will continue to search for light in the cracks. Because heritage is not merely inherited—it is defended.

Until we secure the money, reclaim the land, defend the mind, and restore the social contract, the nation remains under siege.

But this reflection does not end at Nigeria’s borders. Across West Africa, similar patterns are emerging—networks of profit, control, and ideology interacting in ways that threaten both state authority and societal cohesion.

What appears national is increasingly regional.

Yet the situation in Nigeria calls for urgent concern.

Over the past four weeks, we have examined The Insecurity Triad from multiple levels—its three pillars and now this capstone.

But no framework emerges from nothing. Every serious analytical instrument carries within it the intellectual traditions that make it possible—and The Insecurity Triad is no exception.

Also read:  Abuja’s water crisis is not coming. It is already here

Next week, we turn inward—to the pillars of African scholarship that ground the Triad, and to its formal articulation.

Don’t miss it.

Trust is Sacred. Stay seasoned.

David Okere
David Okere

Related Posts

quotes 50
Opinion

Happy birthday Barr. Osifowora 🥳🥳🤗

by Freelanews
July 24, 2021
Lagos security measures under Sanwo-Olu
Opinion

From subsidy removal to infrastructure boom: How Tinubu’s policies are reshaping Nigeria

by Freelanews
June 1, 2025
Osarenti is pedaling toward
Opinion

Nigeria’s teen cyclist Osarenti is pedaling toward Olympic greatness

by Peculiar Adirika
August 4, 2025
WhatsApp Image 2020 04 10 at 7.22.00 AM
Opinion

Elegushi: Radiance of a modern monarch

by Freelanews
April 10, 2020
Pastor Enoch Adeboye jpg
Opinion

Nigeria’s predicaments not solely political – Adeboye

by Quadri Olaitan
February 12, 2024

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

Nigerian

Nigerian Army wipes out bandit camps in major Bauchi assault

April 15, 2026
Cross River

Stakeholders demand custodial sentences for forest law offenders in Cross River

April 15, 2026
Lagos

Tenant dragged to court for beating landlady in Lagos

April 15, 2026
Delta

Delta police arrest driver transporting drugs concealed in energy saving bulbs

April 15, 2026
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
N250k signature

Abiodun vs Amosun: N250k signature plot deepens Ogun political crisis ahead Tinubu visit

April 3, 2026
Omoge Saida

Omoge Saida sparks Nigerian social media over leaked video

October 28, 2025
james akaie

Nollywood SFX makeup artist James Akaie allegedly dies after explosion on Abeokuta movie set

January 13, 2026
Political persecution in Ogun State

Political persecution in Ogun State: Abiodun moves against Otunba Gbenga Daniel with demolition threats again

August 9, 2025
amoke

‘Meals by Amoke’ We serve traditional dishes in a modern way, Bukoye Fasola reveals

19
Image 2024 03 26 at 120645 AM jpeg

Charles Inojie, Ali Nuhu call on communities to #MakeWeHalla against domestic violence

11
Meran Primary Health Centre Lagos father Meran hospital

Lagos father shares heartbreaking experience at Meran Primary Health Centre (Photos)

4
fls2

‘Disarticulated system’ Gov’t confused about Nigerian education, expert laments

3
Nigerian

Nigerian Army wipes out bandit camps in major Bauchi assault

April 15, 2026
Cross River

Stakeholders demand custodial sentences for forest law offenders in Cross River

April 15, 2026
Lagos

Tenant dragged to court for beating landlady in Lagos

April 15, 2026
Delta

Delta police arrest driver transporting drugs concealed in energy saving bulbs

April 15, 2026
April 2026
SMTWTFS
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930 
« Mar    
Freelanews

Freelanews is a Nigerian digital news platform that delivers timely, credible, and engaging stories across politics, business, entertainment, lifestyle, and the creative industry, with a strong focus on promoting innovation, integrity, and inclusivity in storytelling.

Today’s Popular

  • Nigeria

    Shocking: Nigerian Islamic cleric allegedly offers ₦1m bounty, calls for beheading of Christian cleric in outrageous claim

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Lateef Adedimeji, Mo Bimpe fuel exciting baby speculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • German embassy in Abuja announces urgent job vacancy

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • APC sitting on a gunpowder: Why fielding Dapo Abiodun for Ogun east senate may be risky

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Just Published!

Nigerian

Nigerian Army wipes out bandit camps in major Bauchi assault

April 15, 2026
Cross River

Stakeholders demand custodial sentences for forest law offenders in Cross River

April 15, 2026
Lagos

Tenant dragged to court for beating landlady in Lagos

April 15, 2026
Delta

Delta police arrest driver transporting drugs concealed in energy saving bulbs

April 15, 2026
Nigerian medical doctor

Nigerian medical doctor dies after delivering triplets in Bayelsa

April 15, 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Advertisement
  • Sitemap

© 2025 Freelanews | by Iretura.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Crime
  • Business
  • Brands
  • Banking
  • Opinion
  • Interview
  • Entertainment
  • Podcast
    • Àtẹ́lẹwọ́
  • Sports
  • Events

© 2025 Freelanews | by Iretura.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.